Articles
SOILLESS CULTURE OF TOMATO IN DIFFERENT MINERAL SUBSTRATES
Article number
323_23
Pages
251 – 260
Language
Abstract
A commercial-scale experiment with Lorena Fl tomato in a polyethylene greenhouse, with sand, perlite, rockwool slabs, and sepiolite alone or mixed with leonardite (3% by volume), and organic fertilizer with 60% content of humic substances (dry weight), and automatically monitored and controlled from pH, EC and drainage volume, has shown the highest yields for perlite, sepiolite 4/20-mesh plus leonardite, and rockwool.
Productions of 11.0 and 10.2 kg p.sq. m for perlite and the other two substrates have been recorded respectively, showing the possibilities of sepiolite as a new substrate for horticulture.
Changes in physical and chemical properties of the materials have been registered as well.
Perlite air-filled porosity decreased from 74.5 to 26.1% at the end of the growing period.
Differences in the ability to keep the conductivity levels along the time were also shown by the substrates.
Perlite and sand were the materials that kept the lowest EC until the end of the experiment.
Productions of 11.0 and 10.2 kg p.sq. m for perlite and the other two substrates have been recorded respectively, showing the possibilities of sepiolite as a new substrate for horticulture.
Changes in physical and chemical properties of the materials have been registered as well.
Perlite air-filled porosity decreased from 74.5 to 26.1% at the end of the growing period.
Differences in the ability to keep the conductivity levels along the time were also shown by the substrates.
Perlite and sand were the materials that kept the lowest EC until the end of the experiment.
Publication
Authors
P.F. Martinez, M. Abad
Keywords
Online Articles (43)
